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Dive into the research topics where Andrew C. Patterson is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew C. Patterson.


Social Science & Medicine | 2010

Loneliness and risk of mortality: a longitudinal investigation in Alameda County, California.

Andrew C. Patterson; Gerry Veenstra

We investigated the prospective impact of self-reported loneliness on all-cause mortality, mortality from ischemic disease and mortality from other cardiovascular diseases. We tested these effects through GEE binomial regression models applied to longitudinal data from the Alameda County Study of persons aged 21 and over arranged into person-years. Controlling for age and gender, the chances of all-cause mortality were significantly higher among respondents reporting that they often feel lonely compared to those who report that they never feel lonely. Frequent loneliness was not significantly associated with mortality from ischemic heart disease but more than doubled the odds of mortality from other ailments of the circulatory system in models controlling for age and gender. Subsequent models showed that physical activity and depression may be important mediators of loneliness-mortality associations. Finally, we find support for the contention that chronic loneliness significantly increases risk of mortality but also find reason to believe that relatively recent changes in feelings of loneliness increase risk of mortality as well.


International Journal of Health Services | 2012

Capital relations and health: mediating and moderating effects of cultural, economic, and social capitals on mortality in Alameda County, California.

Gerry Veenstra; Andrew C. Patterson

Inspired by Bourdieus theories on various forms of capital, conversions among them, and the fields (social spaces) delineated by possession of them, the authors investigate distinct and interconnected effects of cultural, economic, and social capitals on risk of mortality. Using 35 years of longitudinal data from the Alameda County Study (n = 6,157), they created discrete-time hazard models to predict all-cause mortality from educational attainment (institutionalized cultural capital), household income (economic capital), and different forms of personal ties (social capital). The results show that education, income, having three or more close friends, regularity of church attendance, and participation in social/recreational groups were all negatively and significantly associated with risk of mortality. Income mediated a significant portion of the education effect. None of the personal ties variables mediated the effects of education or income. Relative composition of the sum total of education and income did not have an effect. Lastly, examination of statistical interactions between capitals determined that protective effects of church attendance and participation in community betterment groups applied only to non-wealthy people. These findings speak to the structure of the U.S. social space within which health-delimiting relationally defined social classes may be made manifest.


Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | 2016

Black-White Health Inequalities in Canada.

Gerry Veenstra; Andrew C. Patterson

Little is known about Black–White health inequalities in Canada or the applicability of competing explanations for them. To address this gap, we used nine cycles of the Canadian Community Health Survey to analyze multiple health outcomes in a sample of 3,127 Black women, 309,720 White women, 2,529 Black men and 250,511 White men. Adjusting for age, marital status, urban/rural residence and immigrant status, Black women and men were more likely than their White counterparts to report diabetes and hypertension, Black women were less likely than White women to report cancer and fair/poor mental health and Black men were less likely than White men to report heart disease. These health inequalities persisted after controlling for education, household income, smoking, physical activity and body-mass index. We conclude that high rates of diabetes and hypertension among Black Canadians may stem from experiences of racism in everyday life, low rates of heart disease and cancer among Black Canadians may reflect survival bias and low rates of fair/poor mental health among Black Canadian women represent a mental health paradox similar to the one that exists for African Americans in the United States.


Ethnicity & Health | 2016

South Asian-White health inequalities in Canada: intersections with gender and immigrant status

Gerry Veenstra; Andrew C. Patterson

ABSTRACT Objectives. We apply intersectionality theory to health inequalities in Canada by investigating whether South Asian-White health inequalities are conditioned by gender and immigrant status in a synergistic way. Design. Our dataset comprised 10 cycles (2001–2013) of the Canadian Community Health Survey. Using binary logistic regression modeling, we examined South Asian-White inequalities in self-rated health, diabetes, hypertension and asthma before and after controlling for potentially explanatory factors. Models were calculated separately in subsamples of native-born women, native-born men, immigrant women and immigrant men. Results. South Asian immigrants had higher odds of fair/poor self-rated health, diabetes and hypertension than White immigrants. Native-born South Asian men had higher odds of fair/poor self-rated health than native-born White men and native-born South Asian women had lower odds of hypertension than native-born White women. Education, household income, smoking, physical activity and body mass index did little to explain these associations. The three-way interaction between racial identity, gender and immigrant status approached statistical significance for hypertension but not for self-rated health and asthma. Conclusion. Our findings provide modest support for the intersectionally inspired principle that combinations of identities derived from race, gender and nationality constitute sui generis categories in the manifestation of health outcomes.


Health & Place | 2016

Politics and population health: Testing the impact of electoral democracy

Andrew C. Patterson; Gerry Veenstra

This study addresses questions of whether and why electoral democracies have better health than other nations. After devising a replicable approach to missing data, we compare political, economic, and health-related data for 168 nations collected annually from 1960 through 2010. Regression models estimate that electoral democracies have 11 years of longer life expectancy on average and 62.5% lower rates of infant mortality. The association with life expectancy reduces markedly after controlling for GDP, while a combination of factors may explain the democratic advantage in infant health. Results suggest that income inequality associates independently with both health outcomes but does not mediate their associations with democracy.


Journal of Health Psychology | 2016

Does the mortality risk of social isolation depend upon socioeconomic factors

Andrew C. Patterson

This study considers whether socioeconomic status influences the impact of social isolation on mortality risk. Using data from the Alameda County Study, Cox proportional hazard models indicate that having a high income worsens the mortality risk of social isolation. Education may offset risk, however, and the specific pattern that emerges depends on which measures for socioeconomic status and social isolation are included. Additionally, lonely people who earn high incomes suffer especially high risk of accidents and suicides as well as cancer. Further research is needed that contextualizes the health risks of social isolation within the broader social environment.


International Journal of Comparative Sociology | 2014

Obstacles and momentum on the path to post-genocide and mass atrocity reparations: A comparative analysis, 1945–2010:

R.S. Ratner; Andrew Woolford; Andrew C. Patterson

In contemporary human rights politics, much international effort is invested in securing reparative settlements in the aftermath of genocide and mass atrocities. This article details a broad comparative research project in which we seek to map the respective paths of 47 post-genocide and mass atrocity reparations claims. Based on the findings of this study, using a mixed-methods approach, we highlight some potential obstacles within claims processes and demonstrate the importance of resource mobilization for reparative success. In particular, this article advances sociological understanding of the importance of momentum in resource mobilization as a means of carrying a reparations movement toward successful transitional justice outcomes.


Journal of Adolescence | 2018

Assessing the impacts and outcomes of youth driven mental health promotion: A mixed-methods assessment of the Social Networking Action for Resilience study

Emily K. Jenkins; Vicky Bungay; Andrew C. Patterson; Elizabeth Saewyc; Joy L. Johnson

Mental health challenges are the leading health issue facing youth globally. To better respond to this health challenge, experts advocate for a population health approach inclusive of mental health promotion; yet this area remains underdeveloped. Further, while there is growing emphasis on youth-engaged research and intervention design, evidence of the outcomes and impacts are lacking. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to addressing these gaps, presenting findings from the Social Networking Action for Resilience (SONAR) study, an exploration of youth-driven mental health promotion in a rural community in British Columbia, Canada. Mixed methods including pre- and post-intervention surveys (n = 175) and qualitative interviews (n = 10) captured the outcomes and impacts of the intervention on indicators of mental health, the relationship between level of engagement and benefit, and community perceptions of impact. Findings demonstrate the feasibility and benefits of youth engaged research and intervention at an individual and community-level.


Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | 2017

Erratum to: Black–White Health Inequalities in Canada

Gerry Veenstra; Andrew C. Patterson

1. Dunn JR, Dyck I. Social determinants of health in Canada’s immigrant population: results from the National Population Health Survey. Soc Sci Med. 2000;51(11):1573–93. 2. Newbold KB, Danforth J. Health status and Canada’s immigrant population. Soc Sci Med. 2003;57(10):1981–95. 3. Sampson RJ, Morenoff JD, Gannon-Rowley T. Assessing, ‘‘neighborhood effects:’’ social processes and new directions in research. Annu Rev Sociol. 2002;28:443–78. 4. Krieger N, Sidney S. Racial discrimination and blood pressure: the CARDIA Study of Young Black and White Adults. Am J Public Health. 1996;86(10):1370–8. 5. Xanthos C, Treadwell HM, Holden KM. Social determinants of health among African-American men. J Mens Health. 2007; 7(1):11–9. 6. James C, Este D, Thomas-Bernard W, Benjamin A, Lloyd B, Turner T. Race and well-being: the lives, hopes, and activism of African Canadians. Black Point: Fernwood Publishing; 2010. 7. Lebrun LA, LaVeist TA. Black/White racial disparities in health: a cross-country comparison of Canada and the United States. Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(17):1591–3. 8. Veenstra G. Mismatched racial identities, colourism, and health in Toronto and Vancouver. Soc Sci Med. 2011;73(8):1152–62. 9. Veenstra G. Racialized identity and health in Canada: results from a nationally representative survey. Soc Sci Med. 2009; 69(4):538–42. 10. Chiu MP, Austin DM, Manuel DG, Tu JV. Comparison of cardiovascular risk profiles among ethnic groups using population health surveys between 1996 and 2007. CMAJ. 2010;182(8): E301–10. 11. Rosella LC, Mustard CA, Stukel TA, Corey P, Hux J, Roos L, Manuel DG. The role of ethnicity in predicting diabetes risk at the population level. Ethn Health. 2012;17(4):419–37. 12. Landrine H, Corral I. Separate and unequal: Residential segregation and Black health inequalities. Ethn Dis. 2009;19(2): 179–84. 13. Akinbami LJ, Moorman JE, Bailey C, et al. Trends in asthma prevalence, health care use, and mortality in the United States, 2001–2010. NCHS data brief, no 94. Hyattsville: National Center for Health Statistics; 2012. 14. Fong E. A comparative perspective on racial residential segregation: American and Canadian experiences. Sociol Q. 1996;37(2):199–226. 15. Lloyd-Jones D, Adams RJ, Brown TM, Carnethon M, Dai S, De Simone G, Ferguson TB, Ford E, Furie K, Gillespie C, Go A, Greenlund K, Haase N, Hailpern S, Ho PM, Howard V, Kissela B, Kittner S, Lackland D, Lisabeth L, Marelli A, McDermott MM, Meigs J, Mozaffarian D, Mussolino M, Nichol G, Roger VL, Rosamond W, Sacco R, Sorlie P, Stafford R, Thom T, Wasserthiel-Smoller S, Wong ND, Wylie-Rosett J. Heart disease and stroke statistics—2010 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2010;121(7):E46–215. 16. Blackwell DL, Lucas JW, Clarke TC. Summary health statistics for U.S. adults: National Health Interview Survey, 2012. National Center for Health Statistics. Vital Health Stat. 2012;10(260): 2014. 17. Siegel R, Naishadham D, Jemal A. Cancer statistics, 2012. CA Cancer J Clin. 2012;62(1):10–29. 18. Zuvekas SH, Fleishman JA. Self-rated mental health and racial/ ethnic disparities in mental health service use. Med Care. 2008;46(9):915–23. The online version of the original article can be found under doi:10.1007/s10903-014-0140-6.


Health & Place | 2017

Not all built the same? A comparative study of electoral systems and population health

Andrew C. Patterson

ABSTRACT Much literature depicts a worldwide democratic advantage in population health. However, less research compares health outcomes in the different kinds of democracy or autocracy. In an examination of 179 countries as they existed between 1975 and 2012, advantages in life expectancy and infant health appear most reliably for democracies that include the principle of proportional representation in their electoral rules. Compared to closed autocracies, they had up to 12 or more years of life expectancy on average, 75% less infant mortality, and double the savings in overall mortality for most other age groups. Majoritarian democracies, in contrast, did not experience longitudinal improvements in health relative to closed autocracies. Instead their population health appeared to be on par with or even superseded by competitive autocracies in most models. Findings suggest that the principle of proportional representation may be good for health at the national level. Implications and limitations are discussed. HighlightsCountries with proportional electoral rules tended to have the best population health.This pattern was consistent across multiple health outcomes.Countries with majoritarian electoral rules performed comparably to competitive autocracies.

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Gerry Veenstra

University of British Columbia

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Elizabeth Saewyc

University of British Columbia

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Emily K. Jenkins

University of British Columbia

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R.S. Ratner

University of British Columbia

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Vicky Bungay

University of British Columbia

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